Saker Interview with Michael Hudson on Venezuela
The Saker and Michael Hudson • February 7, 2019
Introduction: There is a great deal of controversy about the true shape of the Venezuelan economy and whether Hugo Chavez’ and Nicholas Maduro’s reform and policies were crucial for the people of Venezuela or whether they were completelymisguided and precipitated the current crises. Anybody and everybody seems to have very strong held views about this. But I don’t simply because I lack the expertise to have any such opinions. So I decided to ask one of the most respected independent economists out there, Michael Hudson, for whom I have immense respect and whose analyses (including those he co-authored with Paul Craig Roberts) seem to be the most credible and honest ones you can find. In fact, Paul Craig Roberts considers Hudson the “best economist in the world“!
I am deeply grateful to Michael for his replies which, I hope, will contribute to a honest and objective understanding of what really is taking place in Venezuela.The Saker
The Saker: Could you summarize the state of Venezuela’s economy when Chavez came to power?
Michael Hudson:
Venezuela was an oil monoculture. Its export revenue was spent largely
on importing food and other necessities that it could have produced at
home. Its trade was largely with the United States. So despite its oil
wealth, it ran up foreign debt.
From
the outset, U.S. oil companies have feared that Venezuela might someday
use its oil revenues to benefit its overall population instead of
letting the U.S. oil industry and its local comprador aristocracy siphon
off its wealth. So the oil industry – backed by U.S. diplomacy – held
Venezuela hostage in two ways.
First
of all, oil refineries were not built in Venezuela, but in Trinidad and
in the southern U.S. Gulf Coast states. This enabled U.S. oil companies
– or the U.S. Government – to leave Venezuela without a means of “going
it alone” and pursuing an independent policy with its oil, as it needed
to have this oil refined. It doesn’t help to have oil reserves if you
are unable to get this oil refined so as to be usable.
Second,
Venezuela’s central bankers were persuaded to pledge their oil reserves
and all assets of the state oil sector (including Citgo) as collateral
for its foreign debt. This meant that if Venezuela defaulted (or was
forced into default by U.S. banks refusing to make timely payment on its
foreign debt), bondholders and U.S. oil majors would be in a legal
position to take possession of Venezuelan oil assets.
These
pro-U.S. policies made Venezuela a typically polarized Latin American
oligarchy. Despite being nominally rich in oil revenue, its wealth was
concentrated in the hands of a pro-U.S. oligarchy that let its domestic
development be steered by the World Bank and IMF. The indigenous
population, especially its rural racial minority as well as the urban
underclass, was excluded from sharing in the country’s oil wealth. The
oligarchy’s arrogant refusal to share the wealth, or even to make
Venezuela self-sufficient in essentials, made the election of Hugo
Chavez a natural outcome.
The Saker: Could you outline the various reforms and changes introduced by Hugo Chavez? What did he do right, and what did he do wrong?
Michael Hudson:
Chavez sought to restore a mixed economy to Venezuela, using its
government revenue – mainly from oil, of course – to develop
infrastructure and domestic spending on health care, education,
employment to raise living standards and productivity for his electoral
constituency.
What
he was unable to do was to clean up the embezzlement and built-in
rake-off of income from the oil sector. And he was unable to stem the
capital flight of the oligarchy, taking its wealth and moving it abroad –
while running away themselves.
This
was not “wrong”. It merely takes a long time to change an economy’s
disruption – while the U.S. is using sanctions and “dirty tricks” to
stop that process.
The Saker:
What are, in your opinion, the causes of the current economic crisis in
Venezuela – is it primarily due to mistakes by Chavez and Maduro or is
the main cause US sabotage, subversion and sanctions?
Michael Hudson:
There is no way that Chavez and Maduro could have pursued a
pro-Venezuelan policy aimed at achieving economic independence without
inciting fury, subversion and sanctions from the United States. American
foreign policy remains as focused on oil as it was when it invaded Iraq
under Dick Cheney’s regime. U.S. policy is to treat Venezuela as an
extension of the U.S. economy, running a trade surplus in oil to spend
in the United States or transfer its savings to U.S. banks.
By
imposing sanctions that prevent Venezuela from gaining access to its
U.S. bank deposits and the assets of its state-owned Citco, the United
States is making it impossible for Venezuela to pay its foreign debt.
This is forcing it into default, which U.S. diplomats hope to use as an
excuse to foreclose on Venezuela’s oil resources and seize its foreign
assets much as Paul Singer hedge fund sought to do with Argentina’s
foreign assets.
Just
as U.S. policy under Kissinger was to make Chile’s “economy scream,” so
the U.S. is following the same path against Venezuela. It is using that
country as a “demonstration effect” to warn other countries not to act
in their self-interest in any way that prevents their economic surplus
from being siphoned off by U.S. investors.
The Saker:
What in your opinion should Maduro do next (assuming he stays in power
and the USA does not overthrow him) to rescue the Venezuelan economy?
Michael Hudson:
I cannot think of anything that President Maduro can do that he is not
doing. At best, he can seek foreign support – and demonstrate to the
world the need for an alternative international financial and economic
system.
He
already has begun to do this by trying to withdraw Venezuela’s gold
from the Bank of England and Federal Reserve. This is turning into
“asymmetrical warfare,” threatening to de-sanctify the dollar standard
in international finance. The refusal of England and the United States
to grant an elected government control of its foreign assets
demonstrates to the entire world that U.S. diplomats and courts alone
can and will control foreign countries as an extension of U.S.
nationalism.
The
price of the U.S. economic attack on Venezuela is thus to fracture the
global monetary system. Maduro’s defensive move is showing other
countries the need to protect themselves from becoming “another
Venezuela” by finding a new safe haven and paying agent for their gold,
foreign exchange reserves and foreign debt financing, away from the
dollar, sterling and euro areas.
The
only way that Maduro can fight successfully is on the institutional
level, upping the ante to move “outside the box.” His plan – and of
course it is a longer-term plan – is to help catalyze a new
international economic order independent of the U.S. dollar standard. It
will work in the short run only if the United States believes that it
can emerge from this fight as an honest financial broker, honest banking
system and supporter of democratically elected regimes. The Trump
administration is destroying illusion more thoroughly than any
anti-imperialist critic or economic rival could do!
Over
the longer run, Maduro also must develop Venezuelan agriculture, along
much the same lines that the United States protected and developed its
agriculture under the New Deal legislation of the 1930s – rural
extension services, rural credit, seed advice, state marketing
organizations for crop purchase and supply of mechanization, and the
same kind of price supports that the United States has long used to
subsidize domestic farm investment to increase productivity.
The Saker: What
about the plan to introduce a oil-based crypto currency? Will that be
an effective alternative to the dying Venezuelan Bolivar?
Michael Hudson:
Only a national government can issue a currency. A “crypto” currency
tied to the price of oil would become a hedging vehicle, prone to
manipulation and price swings by forward sellers and buyers. A national
currency must be based on the ability to tax, and Venezuela’s main tax
source is oil revenue, which is being blocked from the United States. So
Venezuela’s position is like that of the German mark coming out of its
hyperinflation of the early 1920s. The only solution involves
balance-of-payments support. It looks like the only such support will
come from outside the dollar sphere.
The
solution to any hyperinflation must be negotiated diplomatically and be
supported by other governments. My history of international trade and
financial theory, Trade, Develpoment and Foreign Debt, describes the German reparations problem and how its hyperinflation was solved by the Rentenmark.
Venezuela’s
economic-rent tax would fall on oil, and luxury real estate sites, as
well as monopoly prices, and on high incomes (mainly financial and
monopoly income). This requires a logic to frame such tax and monetary
policy. I have tried to explain how to achieve monetary and hence
political independence for the past half-century. China is applying such
policy most effectively. It is able to do so because it is a large and
self-sufficient economy in essentials, running a large enough export
surplus to pay for its food imports. Venezuela is in no such position.
That is why it is looking to China for support at this time.
The Saker:
How much assistance do China, Russia and Iran provide and how much can
they do to help? Do you think that these three countries together can
help counter-act US sabotage, subversion and sanctions?
Michael Hudson:
None of these countries have a current capacity to refine Venezuelan
oil. This makes it difficult for them to take payment in Venezuelan oil.
Only a long-term supply contract (paid for in advance) would be
workable. And even in that case, what would China and Russia do if the
United States simply grabbed their property in Venezuela, or refused to
let Russia’s oil company take possession of Citco? In that case, the
only response would be to seize U.S. investments in their own country as
compensation.
At
least China and Russia can provide an alternative bank clearing
mechanism to SWIFT, so that Venezuela can by pass the U.S. financial
system and keep its assets from being grabbed at will by U.S.
authorities or bondholders. And of course, they can provide safe-keeping
for however much of Venezuela’s gold it can get back from New York and
London.
Looking
ahead, therefore, China, Russia, Iran and other countries need to set
up a new international court to adjudicate the coming diplomatic crisis
and its financial and military consequences. Such a court – and its
associated international bank as an alternative to the U.S.-controlled
IMF and World Bank – needs a clear ideology to frame a set of principles
of nationhood and international rights with power to implement and
enforce its judgments.
This
would confront U.S. financial strategists with a choice: if they
continue to treat the IMF, World Bank, ITO and NATO as extensions of
increasingly aggressive U.S. foreign policy, they will risk isolating
the United States. Europe will have to choose whether to remain a U.S.
economic and military satellite, or to throw in its lot with Eurasia.
However,
Daniel Yergin reports in the Wall Street Journal (Feb. 7) that China is
trying to hedge its bets by opening a back-door negotiation with
Guaido’s group, apparently to get the same deal that it has negotiated
with Maduro’s government. But any such deal seems unlikely to be honored
in practice, given U.S. animosity toward China and Guaido’s total
reliance on U.S. covert support.
The Saker:
Venezuela kept a lot of its gold in the UK and money in the USA. How
could Chavez and Maduro trust these countries or did they not have
another choice? Are there viable alternatives to New York and London or
are they still the “only game in town” for the world’s central banks?
Michael Hudson:
There was never real trust in the Bank of England or Federal Reserve,
but it seemed unthinkable that they would refuse to permit an official
depositor from withdrawing its own gold. The usual motto is “Trust but
verify.” But the unwillingness (or inability) of the Bank of England to
verify means that the formerly unthinkable has now arrived: Have these
central banks sold this gold forward in the post-London Gold Pool and
its successor commodity markets in their attempt to keep down the price
so as to maintain the appearance of a solvent U.S. dollar standard.
Paul
Craig Roberts has described how this system works. There are forward
markets for currencies, stocks and bonds. The Federal Reserve can offer
to buy a stock in three months at, say, 10% over the current price.
Speculators will by the stock, bidding up the price, so as to take
advantage of “the market’s” promise to buy the stock. So by the time
three months have passed, the price will have risen. That is largely how
the U.S. “Plunge Protection Team” has supported the U.S. stock market.
The
system works in reverse to hold down gold prices. The central banks
holding gold can get together and offer to sell gold at a low
price in three months. “The market” will realize that with low-priced
gold being sold, there’s no point in buying more gold and bidding its
price up. So the forward-settlement market shapes today’s market.
The
question is, have gold buyers (such as the Russian and Chinese
government) bought so much gold that the U.S. Fed and the Bank of
England have actually had to “make good” on their forward sales, and
steadily depleted their gold? In this case, they would have been “living
for the moment,” keeping down gold prices for as long as they could,
knowing that once the world returns to the pre-1971 gold-exchange
standard for intergovernmental balance-of-payments deficits, the U.S.
will run out of gold and be unable to maintain its overseas military
spending (not to mention its trade deficit and foreign disinvestment in
the U.S. stock and bond markets). My book on Super-Imperialism explains
why running out of gold forced the Vietnam War to an end. The same logic
would apply today to America’s vast network of military bases
throughout the world.
Refusal
of England and the U.S. to pay Venezuela means that other countries
realize that foreign official gold reserves can be held hostage to U.S.
foreign policy, and even to judgments by U.S. courts to award this gold
to foreign creditors or to whoever might bring a lawsuit under U.S. law
against these countries.
This
hostage-taking now makes it urgent for other countries to develop a
viable alternative, especially as the world de-dedollarizes and a
gold-exchange standard remains the only way of constraining the
military-induced balance of payments deficit of the United States or any
other country mounting a military attack. A military empire is very
expensive – and gold is a “peaceful” constraint on military-induced
payments deficits. (I spell out the details in my Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (1972), updated in German as Finanzimperium (2017).
The
U.S. has overplayed its hand in destroying the foundation of the
dollar-centered global financial order. That order has enabled the
United States to be “the exceptional nation” able to run
balance-of-payments deficits and foreign debt that it has no intention
(or ability) to pay, claiming that the dollars thrown off by its foreign
military spending “supply” other countries with their central bank
reserves (held in the form of loans to the U.S. Treasury – Treasury
bonds and bills – to finance the U.S. budget deficit and its military
spending, as well as the largely military U.S. balance-of-payments
deficit.
Given
the fact that the EU is acting as a branch of NATO and the U.S. banking
system, that alternative would have to be associated with the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization, and the gold would have to be kept in Russia
and/or China.
The Saker: What can other Latin American countries such as Bolivia, Nicaragua, Cuba and, maybe, Uruguay and Mexico do to help Venezuela?
Michael Hudson:
The best thing neighboring Latin American countries can do is to join
in creating a vehicle to promote de-dollarization and, with it, an
international institution to oversee the writedown of debts that are
beyond the ability of countries to pay without imposing austerity and
thereby destroying their economies.
An
alternative also is needed to the World Bank that would make loans in
domestic currency, above all to subsidize investment in domestic food
production so as to protect the economy against foreign food-sanctions –
the equivalent of a military siege to force surrender by imposing
famine conditions. This World Bank for Economic Acceleration would put
the development of self-reliance for its members first, instead of
promoting export competition while loading borrowers down with foreign
debt that would make them prone to the kind of financial blackmail that
Venezuela is experiencing.
Being
a Roman Catholic country, Venezuela might ask for papal support for a
debt write-down and an international institution to oversee the ability
to pay by debtor countries without imposing austerity, emigration,
depopulation and forced privatization of the public domain.
Two
international principles are needed. First, no country should be obliged
to pay foreign debt in a currency (such as the dollar or its
satellites) whose banking system acts to prevents payment.
Second,
no country should be obliged to pay foreign debt at the price of losing
its domestic autonomy as a state: the right to determine its own
foreign policy, to tax and to create its own money, and to be free of
having to privatize its public assets to pay foreign creditors. Any such
debt is a “bad loan” reflecting the creditor’s own irresponsibility or,
even worse, pernicious asset grab in a foreclosure that was the whole
point of the loan.
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